Can I rent out a parking space in an apartment building? Check authority first
An empty space in an apartment building can look like easy host supply, but the first question is whether you have the authority to offer it. A deed, lease, building rule, co-owner arrangement, or access system may limit who can use the space and how it can be shared. Check those documents before writing a listing.
Verify the right to offer it
Identify whether the space is part of your unit, a separately owned bay, a common area, or a rented place. If you are a tenant, read the lease and ask the owner. If the building has an owners' association, cooperative, manager, or controlled gate, check its current rules and any requirement to notify or obtain consent. Do not assume that paying for a space gives you permission to grant access to a third party.
Then check the practical details: Can a visitor enter without following another resident? Is the gate code personal? Can a driver access the space at the promised times? Is the marked bay actually yours, and can a larger car fit without crossing into a neighbour's area? A clear answer protects the driver and the building.
Publish only what you can honour
Describe the location context, access, dimensions, hours, and restrictions without publishing private codes or unnecessary resident information. Keep records of the permission or document you relied on. If the authority or access system changes, pause availability and refresh the listing before accepting another booking.
The host checklist helps prepare the offer, and the public listing page starts the host flow. For broader rules, read renting out a parking spot in Czechia; for a binding answer about your building, ask the owner, manager, or adviser who can inspect the documents.